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All good advice, but I'm pretty certain Dad would be just as miserable on any diet that a nutritionist prescribed and I'm afraid it will just give my brother more amunition. Dad's just always been a carb junkie... I know because the diet my dietician put me on when I was diagnosed with Diabetes, which is supposed to be satisfying, never is. I manage it though, mainly because food isn't my end all...I'm not 87 and stuck with pretty much nothing else to do but sit around the house and think about food. Plus, I have good teeth, so can eat a larger variety of good foods that dad can't. I have tried Stevia, but I can tell you, as sweet as Dad loves his food, he'd be going through that stuff like it was real sugar, and it's not cheap.

Garden Angle, fortunately dad did quit smoking when mom was diagnosed with Lung Cancer 8 years ago...but a lot of the health damage was already well on it's way. I do have Dad's DOPA as well as POA, but since Brother and Sis in Law have physical custody I would never try to pull rank unless something were a dire emergency. The only alternative of Dad living with brother and sis in law would be assisted living or NH and that would kill him even faster I'm afraid. I do believe Sunnygirl is right though, dad is competent and he should be able to decide for himself what he wants to eat. I just need to get my brother to let up on him somehow.

I live a 7 hour drive away, so needless to say, I'm only there a couple times a year. I do try to stay in touch by phone often though. Unfortunately he can't live with us, as my 72 yr old husband and my dad are on opposite ends of the universe when it comes to about anything and we only have a smaller two bedroom home so they would be together all the time with no way to get away from each other. It wouldn't be pretty, believe me.

So he's trapped at my brother's and on a strict diet and miserable. It's just a sad situation, one which I will be walking into in exactly one week and two days...so I came looking for ammunition to be armed with, if you know what I mean.
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As long as your dad is competent, why can't he decide for himself what he will eat? It's not your brother's decision. At 87 years of age with health issues, it would seem it's your dad who should decide what he eats. It might be concerning to brother, but it's not his decision to make if he's not legally the person in charge. Dad might name his Durable Power of Attorney and make sure everyone knows his wishes, which doesn't include a strict diet.
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It sounds as though your brother won't listen to you or his wife, so perhaps it might be helpful if your dad could see a dietitian to plan a diet that is a little more flexible.
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Try to get your brother to compromise, with perhaps one sweet food per day or per meal - just make the proportions smaller.

Getting your father to stop smoking would be the best of all though.

Another alternative if you live close enough is to take your father out for lunch or dinner weekly, if that's possible, so he does have something to look forward to.

I think food takes a higher level of need in terms of satisfaction for older people; sometimes it's all they have left.

But there are healthy diets that aren't deprivation diets. You might try doing some research on them and see how you can supplement your father's diet, or make suggestions to your brother for foods that are in fact healthy but not laden with sugar or other undesirable foods.

BTW, stevia is a sugar substitute. It's used by gardeners and people who don't want to eat refined sugar.

Prevention magazine used to be good for providing nutritious alternative foods that aren't laden with sugar, preservatives and other junk.

You might also (if you have HIPAA authority) talk to his doctor(s), and/or ask them for a nutritional consult with someone who is in fact familiar with alternative diets.
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"I wonder if the mental anguish he's feeling by not being able to eat what he's loved all his life isn't worse then the physical problems the food might cause." Yes. Yes it is worse. What is the point in living longer and hating it?

"Has this happened to anyone?"
Yes. A special diet was recommended for my husband. In his case it wasn't for weight control, it was about swallowing issues. He tried it faithfully for a month, and became more and more depressed. Finally he said to me, "I am really sorry, but I just can't do this. I'd rather take my chances on choking or dying from aspiration pneumonia than to live like this." And we dropped the diet.

(BTW, both his PCP geriatrician and the behavioral neurologist who treated his dementia supported his decision to ditch the diet.)

It would be good for Dad to lose some weight. He lost the weight. There are ways of maintaining that loss or minimizing what he might regain without being on a depression-causing strict diet with lots of limitations.

As a foodie myself, I think what your brother is doing is cruel and unnecessary. And it probably is NOT what the medical staff had in mind when they advised "lose some weight."
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